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Title: Alternate Assessment Achievement Standard Setting Task Force II


1
Alternate Assessment Achievement Standard Setting
Task Force II
  • October 17, 2006
  • Hilton Downtown
  • Indianapolis

2
NCLB Regulations andAlternate Assessment
  • Information to Assist Local Education Agencies in
    Understanding Regulations and Current Practice

Distributed April 2006 by the Indiana Department
of Education, Division of Exceptional Learners
3
Our intentions have been to develop an alternate
assessment system that meets the requirements of
regulatory policy while maintaining sufficient
psychometric integrity and practical utility for
families, classroom teachers, and school systems.
Practical Utility
Policy
Psychometric Sufficiency
4
Guiding Principles - Indiana
  • All children can be successfully challenged to
    learn.
  • It is expected that all children will make
    educational gains
  • through out their schooling.
  • Students show their abilities in many different
    ways.
  • We value professional judgment of student
    performance in
  • many contexts over time as being valid and
    useful.
  • We respect the importance of the teacher as the
    agent for
  • learning.

5
  • July 2002 (Title I of NCLB)
  • Sec. 200.6(a)(2) a State's academic assessment
    system must provide one or more alternate
    assessments for those students with disabilities
    (as defined under section 602(3) of the
    Individuals with Disabilities Education Act),
    who, in the determination of the student's IEP
    team, cannot participate in all or part of the
    State assessments, even with appropriate
    accommodations.

6
  • July 2002 (continued)
  • Sec. 200.8(a) individual student reports must
    describe achievement measured against the State's
    academic achievement standards.

7
The Alternate Assessment needs CUT SCORES? NCLB
says YES.
  • Content Standards What students should know and
    be able to do.
  • Achievement Standards What is good enough and
    what is not good enough as defined through
    performance descriptors and cut scores.
  • Performance Levels Labels each level of
    achievement
  • Performance Descriptors Describes each level of
    performance
  • Cut Score Scores that separate the different
    levels of performance

8
Achievement Levels
Graphic represents what is required by NCLB
There must be a score of basic which would
count as not proficient. (ISTEP uses no
pass)
ISTEP
Pass
No Pass
ISTAR
Pass
9
  • Federal Peer Review Requirements
  • Submitted November 2005 by Indiana

2.1 Has the State approved/adopted alternate
academic achievement standards for students with
the most significant cognitive disabilities? Evide
nce a description of the process for defining
alternate achievement standards and documentation
in State Board of Education minutes of formal
approval (occurred 09/05/05) 2.3 Do these
alternate academic achievement standards include
at least three levels of achievement, including
two levels of high achievement (proficient and
advanced) that determine how well students are
mastering a States academic content standards
and a third level of achievement (basic) to
provide information about the progress of
lower-achieving students toward mastering the
proficient and advanced levels of
achievement? Evidence Documentation that refers
to the levels, descriptions, and cut scores that
make up the States alternate academic
achievement standards
10
Approval for State Assessment Systems
  • National map of status of states
  • Education Week article
  • eSchool News Online article

11
  • August 2005 Statewide Committee Develops
    Alternate Achievement Standards for ISTAR
  • Over 40 representatives from school districts,
    universities, and parent groups joined in the
    process.
  • Participants were given information as to the
    federal regulations and guidelines and the
    process of standard setting.
  • Participants reviewed the data distribution from
    2004 results.
  • Participants were given opportunity to discuss
    the consequences of their decisions. Although
    everyone appreciated the idea of setting high
    expectations for all students, there was a
    general understanding that this was only the
    beginning of a long journey to find a valid way
    to include students with special needs in the
    accountability system.
  • Participants worked in small groups and then
    came together to compare progress. This was
    repeated until the group had offered a workable
    plan that spanned grades 3-10 in three clusters.

12
Rationale Of Cluster Group Cut Scores From Peer
Review Guidance Document
  • When examined across grades, the alternate
    achievement standards are not likely to show the
    same clearly defined advances in cognitive
    complexity as the achievement standards set for
    the regular assessment. States are expected to
    rely on the judgment of experienced special
    educators, administrators, higher education
    representatives, and parents of students with
    disabilities as they define alternate achievement
    standards in a manner that provides an
    appropriate challenge for students with the most
    significant cognitive disabilities as they move
    through their schooling.

13
Blue line is average expected progress, one grade
each year. Pink connected dots are average ISTAR
scores for those eligible in 2004. Heavy pink
lines represent about one standard deviation
range of those scores.
10
8
6
4
2
K
F2
F1
B2
B1
GRADES
14
2004 RESULTS
Passing ISTEP
Eligibility Determination
1
counted as proficient In 2004
(Curve theoretically represents achievement of
special education students)
15
(No Transcript)
16
2005 RESULTS
Passing ISTEP
Eligibility Determination
1
counted as proficient In 2005
counted as basic In 2005
(Curve theoretically represents achievement of
special education students)
17
ISTAR Results 2005
Note Difference between participation total and
sum of achievement levels accounts for students
found ineligible.
18
Reconciling NCLB Regulations andIndianas
Guiding Principles
  • Do we believe that we must find a valid way to
    include students with special needs in the
    accountability system?
  • YES
  • Do we believe that we have found all the answers
    to the questions of how to balance policy,
    psychometric validity and practical utility?
  • NO

19
What should school personnel do with the results
indicating a basic academic achievement level?
  • Learn the performance descriptors that define the
    lowest level of achievement.
  • Verify that raters took quality time to consider
    even the slightest evidence of academic
    performance.
  • Verify that instructors are giving all children
    opportunities to express themselves and attempt
    the most basic concepts that have been
    articulated in the lowest level of achievement
    for the alternate assessment in mathematics and
    language arts.
  • Plan academic opportunities for children who
    might be able to attempt the challenges.

20
(No Transcript)
21
No effect
22
ETHNICITY
Other 3
Hisp 4
Black 18
White 75
23
GENDER
Female 38
Male 62
24
-1 SD 1
-2 SD 12
-3 Standard Deviations 87
COGNITIVE DEVIATION
25
EXCEPTIONALITIES
Other 6
Autism 17
Multiple 15
Mild 12
Severe 11
Moderate 39
26
After Applying these cut scores
27
21
28
18
29
TASK I Reset Achievement Levelsfor Fall 2006
  • Supporting Materials
  • Cut Score Packet
  • Survey of Consequences sheet
  • How ISTAR scores counted sheet
  • Yellow booklet of base statements and assessment
    elements

30
TASK I Reset Achievement Levelsfor Fall 2006
  • Red Grades 3 5
  • Yellow Grades 6 8
  • Blue Grades 9 10
  • Group Process
  • Understand that we need to have cut scores.
  • Review and discuss the materials.
  • Make a recommendation of if the cut scores should
    be adjusted, and if so, how.
  • Record the main points of the discussion and be
    prepared to report back to the larger group.

31
LUNCH
32
  • Principles of Inclusive Assessment
  • Identified by NCEO (Thurlow, Quenemoen,
    Thompson, Lehr, 2001)
  • All students with disabilities are included in
    the assessment system.
  • All students with disabilities are included when
    student scores are publicly reported, in the same
    frequency and format.
  • 4. The assessment performance of students with
    disabilities has the same impact on the final
    accountability index as the performance of other
    students, regardless of how the students
    participate in the assessment system.
  • 6. Every policy and practice reflects the belief
    that all students must be included in the state
    and district assessment and accountability
    systems.

33
  • What does proficient mean?

In an ACHIEVEMENT STANDARD model, proficiency
means as good or better than the cut score.
What would proficient mean in a growth model?
34
STATIC
DYNAMIC
INDIVIDUAL
AGGREGATE
35
  • Other Ways of Thinking
  • States are permitted under NCLB to establish
    multiple performance standards for alternate
    assessments although most employ a common single
    set of standards. In terms of NCLB, as long as
    less that one percent of the total student body
    counts as proficient, there is flexibility in how
    that proficiency is determined.
  • Growth models models of accountability that
    measure progress by tracking achievement scores
    of the same students from one year to the next to
    determine progress.
  • Value-added models take into account growth and
    background characteristics to determine the
    effect of a particular program.
  • North Carolina Based on an initial score, a
    four year trajectory is created for each student
    who did not perform at the proficient level.
  • Tennessee Each subgroup has a projected
    percentage of students who must meet the approved
    annual measurable objective

36
Categories of Reporting For Early Childhood to
OSEP
  • Maintained peer level
  • Achieved peer level
  • Improved (near peer)
  • Improved (but not near peer)
  • Did not Improve

37
(No Transcript)
38
Value Table Neutralfrom the Center for
Assessment
39
Progress Value TableUtah Department of Education
40
Initial Value Table Committee Recommendation Alas
ka Department of Education
41
Language Arts
GRADES
42
(No Transcript)
43
Mathematics
GRADES
44
(No Transcript)
45
Would growth help?
46
TASK II Propose Alternative Ideas for Measuring
Proficiency
  • Group A Work within current method with
    adjustments
  • Group B Work with a model of individualized
    growth
  • Group C Work with a model of aggregate growth
  • Group Process
  • Review pros and cons
  • Discuss models that may hold promise
  • Outline best ideas and what would need to be done
    in pursuit of these ideas
  • Be prepared to share thoughts with large group
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